U.S. policymakers can't count on that kind of dedication as they map out the electric-car future. President Barack Obama aims to get a million electric cars and plug-in hybrids on U.S. roads by 2015 to ease U.S. reliance on imported oil and cut carbon emissions. The first two mass-market electrics, Nissan's Leaf and the Chevy Volt, are set to hit the streets this fall.
Companies are starting to compete to provide services, but a
dominant approach and standard have yet to emerge
Anton Klima is a self-described electric car fanatic. The Los Angeles television
cameraman is already on his second electric vehicle, a battery-powered BMW Mini
E. To make sure he's carbon-free, he charges the car from solar panels on the
roof of his Hollywood Hills home. But when he's out and about, Klima has to
make do with a patchy network of public chargers left over from California's original
electric-car campaign a decade ago. Though he can now track down chargers with
an iPhone app, the shape of the plugs has changed, so Klima has to carry three
adapters to be sure he can power up. "After a while you get used to [the
hassles]," Klima says.
U.S.
policymakers can't count on that kind of dedication as they map out the
electric-car future. President Barack Obama aims to get a million electric cars
and plug-in hybrids on U.S.
roads by 2015 to ease U.S.
reliance on imported oil and cut carbon emissions. The first two mass-market
electrics, Nissan's Leaf and the Chevy Volt, are set to hit the streets this
fall.
The problem will be finding places to charge all those
vehicles. To eliminate "range anxiety"—EV-speak for the fear of being
stranded with drained batteries—drivers will need to know they can plug in at
shopping centers, restaurants, or parking meters. "Two chargers are needed
for each car—one where you live and one where you work," says Richard
Lowenthal, chief executive officer of Coulomb Technologies, a California-based
maker of electric car charging stations. Building that infrastructure, he
estimates, "may be a $12 billion industry."
Recognizing the need for charging stations, Democratic and
Republican House and Senate members on May 27 proposed legislation to expand
tax credits for the installation of charging equipment as well as electric
vehicle purchases. The measure would direct the Energy Dept. to award $800
million in grants to support charging facilities for 700,000 electric vehicles
within six years.
Coulomb is one of at least a half-dozen companies aiming to
win some of that cash and build the fuel stations of the 21st century.
Lowenthal plans to install 4,600 chargers in nine U.S. metropolitan areas by the end
of 2011 at a cost of $2,000-$5,000 each. The company also aims to offer
smartphone apps and navigation software that will guide drivers to the nearest
available charger.
Arizona-based ECOtality has won a $100 million federal grant
and is working with Nissan to install more than 11,000 chargers in five U.S. states
within three years. Nissan is also working with a company called AeroVironment
to put charging equipment in homes, and it hopes to build a network of public
chargers as well. Better Place, based in Palo
Alto, Calif., is
taking a different approach: Instead of simply charging cars, the company plans
to open stations where drained batteries can be swapped for charged ones. The
startup expects to introduce its service next year in Israel and Denmark;
Hawaii and the San Francisco Bay Area will
likely be its first U.S.
markets.
SemaConnect, based in Annapolis,
Md., has developed a $2,500 wall-mounted
charger for public use. The company has sold the devices to three locations in
the WashingtonAnnapolis,
Md., Russell Rankin charges a
fleet of 10 electric cars that he uses to shuttle guests to local attractions.
Rankin says he plans to order more chargers as his company grows. "Our
expansion plans are facilitated by these chargers," he says.
area. At one, a hotel in
Utilities are preparing for the shift as well. While they
say they should be able to handle the extra load, upgrades are needed. These
include transformers to keep neighborhood circuits from overloading if multiple
cars are plugged in at once, smart meters to monitor how vehicles charge, and
rewiring older homes to handle 220-volt charging devices, says Pedro Pizarro,
an executive vice-president at Southern California Edison, California's largest
utility. "We need to know when people are charging, what vehicles they're
charging," he says.
Some experts caution against moving too fast. Mark Duvall,
director of electric transportation for the Electric Power Research Institute,
an industry group, believes it may be hard for the U.S. to reach Obama's target. He
predicts sales are unlikely to top 15,000 electric cars annually before 2013.
"If you build some solid gold-plated infrastructure before you understand
what the public wants or needs," he says, "you're going to squander a
lot of resources."